Welcome to the WetCanvas forums. You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions, articles and access our other FREE features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), respond to polls, upload your own photos and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today!

If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please visit our help center.

Here's an ad I was considering answering in Craigslist. It's for a drawing of ballet slippers:

Whether you execute in Pshop or on paper, I'm seeing pastel or watercolor on a solid BG. No photorealism. Be impressionistic. Submit a pencil sketch and bid plus link to portfolio. This is for an ebook and is low budget, but I'll give you a half page for self promotion with a hyperlink plus small fee.

What bothered me is that they ask for a sketch even before they hire you. It seems to me that if they look at my website, they can get a good idea of my drawing skills and my style. I'm perfectly happy to work on sketches if they hire me, but to do one for free seems questionable business practice.

No you are not. They are looking to commission an illustration, but wish to pay nothing in return. They are looking for sketches and bids???, to me that sounds like they are looking for anyone who will work just for the

Quote:

but I'll give you a half page for self promotion with a hyperlink plus small fee

I''d wonder what the small fee was, $1 or $2?
I don't think it will be worth your time to be honest.

An e-book that who will read? 1/2 page for your own advertising is cool in a sort of high school literary magazine sense, but it is worthless if no one reads the book. At some point you need to question the sales the author is getting, and to whom. If it is a guide to ballet sold or given to conferences of ballet slipper manufacturers, you probably have a good deal. If it is a fictional story published on a random nobody author site and is bought by one or two people, I'd say you don't have a good deal. If you want it for portfolio piece, I'd just chalk it up as "volunteer work."

__________________
Katy
Making art since 1973-ishBlog under reconstruction

Just stay off Craigslist. It is honestly nothing but a waste of your time. Everybody there wants something for nothing...Don't be naive and get suckered in! And I am speaking from experience, unfortunately...

Be very cautious of Graigs List. Whether you are looking for work or thinking of purchasing something, always contact the individual posting the ad. If you can’t get a straight (typical from someone is planning on scamming you) answer, just walk away. I had experiences with sellers and let me tell you the more questions you ask the easier to spot a crook. Graig’s List also has a rating option that can rate a seller on good bad or scammer. Don’t be afraid to use it.

I've never even dealt with scammers on there just flaky people that love the *idea* of having some artwork done, but never actually follow through. I even did an entire drawing for a guy which took me a really long time and he never came to pick it up and pay me It was a good lesson learning I guess.

There are people who feel that they are doing the artist a "favor" by asking them to do an art project, even for free. They honestly feel that "I'll give you promotion" is a good enough deal, and (again) that they are the one doing a favor to you, and you should feel really fortunate and lucky if they choose you to work for them for no money.

Not kidding, there are a lot of people like this.

Run, run, run far away.

They don't feel like they're doing the software manufacturer a "favor" by using their software to make the ebook—no, they're expected to pay for that software. If there are any other fees or purchases they need to make in order to create this ebook, they will pay without complaint. But somehow, they don't want to pay the artist, and in fact feel like the artist should be sooooo grateful for the "opportunity."

Yeah, I've been approached more than a few times, if you couldn't guess. Fortunately for me, I am naturally lazy and not easily motivated unless there is money involved, not just "promotion."

The pic shows the Craig’s List rating system box for users to help weed out suspicious behavior. It is located in the top right hand corner when viewing the item or service. All you do is click one of the four items and the rating box will display “Thanks for flagging”.